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#61
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"private" == private writes:
private A - The aerodynamic resultant reaction of an airfoil private pulling air downward. private B - The flight physics teaching concept that an aircraft private (in unaccelerated flight) must generate a force (lift, private thrust ,drag) that balances its (apparent) weight. The problem with restricting your example to unaccelerated flight is that the resulting definition of lift will almost surely be incorrect, by not being general. Imagine for example an airplane in a continuously positive-g loop. Neither definition A or B are valid, yet lift from the wing always occurs. |
#62
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On Sat, 10 Sep 2005 20:48:51 -0700, Bob Fry
wrote: "private" == private writes: private A - The aerodynamic resultant reaction of an airfoil private pulling air downward. private B - The flight physics teaching concept that an aircraft private (in unaccelerated flight) must generate a force (lift, private thrust ,drag) that balances its (apparent) weight. The problem with restricting your example to unaccelerated flight is that the resulting definition of lift will almost surely be incorrect, by not being general. Imagine for example an airplane in a continuously positive-g loop. Neither definition A or B are valid, yet lift from the wing always occurs. So what do we call the aerodynamic force on the horizontal tail that forces the back of the airplane downward to keep the airplane from diving into the ground? If it were acting upward we'd easily refer to it as lift, but it acts downward. Is that lift? Of course this same force is upward when it's on an airplane with a canard. I guess that then it qualifies as lift. What about the aerodynamic force on the vertical tail/rudder that controls yaw? It's acting sideways. And what about the aerodynamic force created by the propeller, which is a wing after all? RK Henry |
#63
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RK Henry wrote:
Bob wrote: The problem with restricting your example to unaccelerated flight is that the resulting definition of lift will almost surely be incorrect, by not being general. Imagine for example an airplane in a continuously positive-g loop. Neither definition A or B are valid, yet lift from the wing always occurs. Correct, the whole lift opposes weight description focuses on a very narrow case (or set of cases). It is not general at all; in fact, it falls apart when the airplane turns! (Try explain why stall speed increases when lift stays the same). IMHO: Those who think of lift as the 'upward' force(s) have simplified the problem too much and this sets up a whole host of inconsistencies. So what do we call the aerodynamic force on the horizontal tail that forces the back of the airplane downward to keep the airplane from diving into the ground? If it were acting upward we'd easily refer to it as lift, but it acts downward. Is that lift? Yes, it is lift. Perhaps 'we' should have called it "push" instead of "lift", but then some would have said that is really should be called "pull". ![]() the world population think when a plane stalls, its engine has stopped), "lift" is also badly chosen. Think of it as the "push" or "pull" force. Of course this same force is upward when it's on an airplane with a canard. I guess that then it qualifies as lift. Same thing really - their primary objective is to induce a nose-up pitching moment to oppose the wing's pitching moment. To answer your quesion, yes, this is also lift. What about the aerodynamic force on the vertical tail/rudder that controls yaw? It's acting sideways. Lift. And what about the aerodynamic force created by the propeller, which is a wing after all? Lift. Hilton |
#64
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"Hilton" wrote in message
k.net... Correct, the whole lift opposes weight description focuses on a very narrow case (or set of cases). It is not general at all; in fact, it falls apart when the airplane turns! A turn is not "unaccelerated flight", which was the condition specifically restricting this entire discussion. IMHO: Those who think of lift as the 'upward' force(s) have simplified the problem too much and this sets up a whole host of inconsistencies. In unaccelerated flight, it is an entirely appropriate simplification for the introduction of the subject. It is certainly FAR more correct than what the original poster's instructor claimed. Pete |
#65
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("Margy" wrote)
[snip] Forced by limiting the space through which the fluid must flow. Think of your garden hose. If you put your thumb over the end and constrict the space the water flows faster through the opening. As the speed increases the pressure decreases, air moves from high pressure to low pressure and the wing of the airplane is in the way of this movement so it is lifted up with the high pressure air. Garden hose + thumb: "As the speed increases the pressure decreases..." part throws me. As the flow increase? C'mon over here and explain it again please. Yes, yes. Of course I'll keep the hose kinked --- almost in range. hehehe Montblack |
#66
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"PD" == Peter Duniho writes:
PD "Hilton" wrote in message IMHO: Those who think of lift as the 'upward' force(s) have simplified the problem too much and this sets up a whole host of inconsistencies. PD In unaccelerated flight, it is an entirely appropriate PD simplification for the introduction of the subject. It is PD certainly FAR more correct than what the original poster's PD instructor claimed. An unaccelerated flight example is fine for the first introduction to aerodynamic forces. The problem is if one doesn't move beyond it. It sounds like the instructor in the OP has done that, never engaging in any thought experiments at the boundaries of the example to explore the limits of his knowledge. That, and no high school physics. Once I taught an aviation class to a couple of Boy Scouts. I started with the typical airplane in level flight and the 4 forces of flight, weight, lift, drag, thrust. All well and good, nothing hard about that! For homework I asked them to consider now a glider: "it's still has weight, so it must product lift, right? And moving through the air, it experiences drag, so there must be thrust, right? But from where? A glider has no engine!" |
#67
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Admittedly I did simplify it a bit.
Brian |
#68
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In a somewhat more extreme example, when I pull my 400 hp Sukhoi into
a nearly vertical attitude, the rate of climb decreases to essentially zero, i.e., the airplane hovers. In this case, the wings are providing essentially no lift and the airplane is being supported by almost totally by thrust. Actually, you should imagine Sean Tucker doing this as I don't do it all that well. ;-) Still the same Principle, Your just transfering your lift from the Fixed wing the Rotating Wing (the Propeller) Brian |
#69
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![]() But the upward aerodynamic force they are looking for to accelerate their craft upward as a result of this lift is called drag. Not really. Yea really. The upward acceleration of the flying glider in a thermal entry is caused 100 percent by the component of the relative airflow caused by the thermal. It requires a force to accelerate the glider upward as a result of the thermal. Lets see what aerodynamic force is most accurately defined as the aerodynamic force that is in the direction of the relative airflow that caused it? That's right drag. Any lift from an upward airflow will be horizontal. That will be why the increased lift points more horizontal. It is true that angle of attack goes up causing more lift but as far as accelerating the glider upward this extra lift is negated by the fact that the direction of this lift moves farther away from the upward direction. This additional lift comes with additional drag and so does the additional wind speed as a result of the thermal. And the direction of this drag is more in the upward direction as a result of the thermal. The thermal not only changes the direction of the relative airflow it increases its speed. A fact that you conveniently left out. Don't dem thar velocity vectors have magnitudes? Now hear is another clue. When drag causes the acceleration of an object the faster that object goes the less drag it generates until it reaches the speed of the air and generates no drag, like the horizontal flight of a balloon. This is because the more the object moves with the wind the less motion between the object and the air. This is why the flight stabilizes to a steady climb at the original constant speed in the rising air. When lift causes the acceleration of an object it has similar dynamics as the flying glider in a thermal entry. If the glider accelerated upward as a result of the aerodynamic force lift it would also affect the relative airflow by changing its speed and direction. You never said any thing about this influence in your analysis. Before entering rising air, a glider's wing sees a relative wind pointed slightly upward. It's pointed straight back up the angle of the glidepath. The lift vector is perpendicular to this, so it angles slightly forward. As the glider enters rising air, the relative wind turns and now angles more steeply upwards as the upwardly pointed vector of rising air is added to the previous vector of relative wind from the glide. If the glider's attitude is unchanged, the changing relative wind increases the AOA and the corresponding lift vector, and that lift vector tilts forward. The drag vector also increases and tilts upwards. Most of the additional force that initially accelerates the glider upwards comes from the increased lift vector. A smaller component comes from the more upwardly tilted drag vector. As the flight stabilizes to a steady climb at the original constant speed in the rising air, the lift and drag vectors will return to the same magnitudes and angles as before relative to the ground. The glider will be in the same attitude relative to the ground. The drag will be the same (same magnitude, same direction), the lift will be the same and the vectors of lift and drag will add up to produce a vertical aerodynamic force that exactly opposes the downward force of gravity. The glider will continue in unaccelerated flight and the only difference will be that the glider is now in a steady unaccelerated climb instead of a steady unaccelerated descent. Do not spin this aircraft. If the aircraft does enter a spin it will return to earth without further attention on the part of the aeronaut. (first handbook issued with the Curtis-Wright flyer) |
#70
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![]() buttman wrote: My instructor, which is a very knowledgable guy tried telling me that lift has nothing to do with airspeed. He said that lift is directly and soley related to AOA and AOA only. Uh-huh. So if you use a crane to lift up the nose of a 747 sitting on the ramp, your instructor believes it will be generating the same amount of lift as it would at that AOA and 400 knots. Detach the crane and the 747 will just stay there in a nose up attitude without any visible means of support. Or maybe your instructor has a poor understanding of lift. Lift is actually a mathematical formula: L = 1/2 air density * velocity squared * area of the wing * coefficient of lift for that wing. Your instructor should know that; it is on both the commercial and flight instructor written exams. You generally can't do much about the air density, but you usually can change your velocity and the coefficient of lift. The coefficient of lift for most wings increases with AOA, peaking at the critical AOA and dropping off sharply at higher AOA after that. Some flaps and other devices (variable geometry wngs come to mind) can change the area of the wing and/or its coefficient of lift. Also, "the area of the wing" is not quite right; it really is a reference area which might have little to do with the actual wing size. A helicopter, for example, uses a reference area equal to the entire disk, not just the blades. The same rule applies to propellers. The reference area on a fixed wing plane includes the area through the fuselage, as if the wing was all one piece. You can use either sq. feet or sq. meters (or, heck, sq. rods if you want to) for the reference area; it all works out as long as you use the same type of units all through the calculation, including air density. |
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